jefecoon | 28 days ago | on: How I use Claude Code: Separation of planning and execution
jefecoon's comments
jefecoon | 3 months ago | on: Show HN: Gemini Pro 3 imagines the HN front page 10 years from now
And, how GPro3 clearly 'knows' HNews and knows what makes it to frontpage, e.g.: - Restoring a 2024 Framework Laptop: A retrospective (ifixit.com) - Show HN: A text editor that doesn't use AI (github.com) - Is it time to rewrite sudo in Zig? (github.com)
Good laughs.
jefecoon | 7 months ago | on: The joy of recursion, immutable data, & pure functions: Making mazes with JS
jefecoon | 1 year ago | on: On Building Git for Lawyers
- Many [ / most? ] law firms have a large, overly-complicated "doc database." These have Word plugins, and they're usually required to 'check-in' each version they prepare prior to sending out. This seems like a very natural point of attack for a dramatically superior git-esque solution.
- Most lawyers / firms have a massive distrust of cloud-hosted tools. I've heard "well, Google can read everything in Google Docs!" more times than I can count. Maybe the public is better educated now, but... maybe don't count on that.
- Toolset for bundling up *ALL* edits compiled by one side, having these "merged" and some sort of formal "approved to send" step would be huge.
- Please continue to track which person made every edit, when, and ideally, if said edit was "merged" and "approved to send" to counter-party.
- Over-invest in super easy UX & eye-candy: you're trying to overcome engrained use of a tool that's about as ubiquitous as the air we breath -- you're going to have to deliver 10x value, and ease-of-use will be critical for adoption. The current demo, and dragging links between boxes.... well, imho, perhaps not quite there yet.
- Finally, I've worked inside MSFT publishing docs & books, worked on hundreds of contracts in biz-dev & corp-dev & investment banking, and please let met state very clearly the need for this product is overwhelming. Please please please build this, and wish you all the luck in the world.
PS: Contractual.ly was pretty great. Wish it had caught more traction.
Happy hunting!
jefecoon | 1 year ago | on: Don't defer Close() on writable files (2017)
Could you recommend your personal favorite(s) of such libraries? Enquiring minds want to know! Thx.
jefecoon | 1 year ago | on: Silicon Valley's best kept secret: Founder liquidity
If equity is going to be a material component of compensation, then the argument "you're not committed enough, you deserve nothing if you leave..." is utter nonsense.
Imho, many/most of these draconian equity / option terms are nothing more than attempts at 'golden handcuffs' to make it more challenging for employees to leave these startups.
Sadly, they work: I know many who couldn't leave roles til they'd saved up for years, or could finally ink second mortgage on their home, etc in order to purchase all their equity in their 90 day post-exit windows....
jefecoon | 2 years ago | on: Ask HN: What are the best resources about learning Ruby programming in 2023
jefecoon | 5 years ago | on: Which color scale to use when visualizing data
Great, widely-referenced site for quickly generating color scales, w color-blind safe options, and large amount of research behind it: https://colorbrewer2.org/#type=sequential&scheme=BuGn&n=3
jefecoon | 5 years ago | on: The Only M1 Benchmark That Matters
Sysadmin to a VAX farm in an earlier life -- this brought back some good memories, especially of what our server room sounded like when we pushed a new build... Thanks for that.
jefecoon | 5 years ago | on: No Hello (2013)
jefecoon | 5 years ago | on: I'm selling my bootstrapped SaaS project. Currently doing $2500 MRR and growing
Happy hunting!
jefecoon | 5 years ago | on: I'm selling my bootstrapped SaaS project. Currently doing $2500 MRR and growing
Sorry to hear you're not interested in continuing the business moving forward. Btw, if you really want to sell, probably best to work on this answer [ e.g. I love other things > i hate this ].
My quick take: - $2500/mo MRR in ~6mo is nice validation of the opportunity. A natural question would be "are you interested in pursuing this as an actual business, and becoming a startup founder?" You should expect this question from any & every potential acquirer. Btw, I'd coach you that "i don't love this space" isn't best answer; try "i find this super interesting, but I love XYZ and that's where my heart is..." Follow-up question: would you join us as a developer on this for 12 months?"
- You'll be viewed as "side hustle," not pre-seed startup. By that i mean to say you're level of 'completeness' and value will be categorized this way. This will make it challenging for a buyer to consider you an 'acqui-hire' level target, e.g. the old adage "$1M / developer" type acqui-hire valuation some co's use for buying teams.
- I think you're most likely acquirers will be influencer marketplace and/or related mktg / agency / services firms [ e.g. Hypr, Traacker, similar ]. They're the independent alternatives to TikTok, Snap, whomever's own features in this area.
- Scraping will be considered a fundamental risk, e.g. "does your current usage fully abide TikTok Terms of Use?" Do they offer an API? If so, why aren't you using it? How at risk is your scraping of being cut off by TT in the future? Have you spoken with a TT biz dev person about this? See 'ckdarby' comment on friend's Insta business getting C&D ltr from FB legal; very hard for you to be acquired if you have any of this risk.
- Valuation: you're super early stage; sorry, i'm not super familiar with valuation around side-hustle projects so I'd google this a bit to see if there are nice precedent / comparables.
- Classic mba style valuation rules-of-thumb, for later stage / at scale businesses: 6.5-7.5x EBITDA. Fairly standard business school valuation rule-of-thumb, e.g. if you were at scale business being considered by private equity buyers they'd start their valuation & waterfall model around here.
Finally, congratulations -- this is a fantastic side-hustle. You may be able to find a way to get a deal closed, especially if you're willing to go with the code-base to help it land, migrate off scraping to API, etc.
J
jefecoon | 7 years ago | on: XML, blockchains, and the strange shapes of progress
We got to participate in a lot of amazing projects, whether relatively simple open standards for DTDs that made it easy to interchange crisply [ eg MathML, many others ], or for industries with considerable interchange challenges [ eg SWIFT ]. These projects were typically fairly lightweight, and fortunately many simply 'worked' and succeeded. In this capacity XML seemed to "just work" and seemed to make the world a better place -- "victory!"
Of course you can't really discuss XML without discussing "Web Services," which is what many consider the "xml ecosystem." Around 1996 Norbert Mikula, Mike Dierken, John Tigue, myself and probably a few other characters began riffing on various ideas of how XML + HTTP could be used. What if you could simply lookup a signed DTD for how your data was suppose to be delivered to you? Lookup a signed DTD for how to invoke its API / RPC calls? Hell, why not have a DNS-like directory of what services are available, whether on your intranet, or from vendors? That's where the original 'whitepages / yellowpages / greenpages' naming convention in the very earliest days of web services came from btw. Naive? Over-optimistic? Absolutely... But we didn't know any better, so why not. We started discussing it with lots of smart people in SGML and XML space, the concepts started turning into prototypes and it started to build momentum.
People who were interested fairly wisely said "a standards body should lead this stuff [ instead of some vendor ]," so the early work landed inside OASIS [ the original SGML standards gangsters ]. Their wisdom gleened from long years building incredibly complex SGML doc systems spared the early XML services from many potential debacles btw. Momentum began to build, and super interesting things started being built.
As Fortune500 IT, startups, middleware vendors and app servers became increasingly interested in tapping in this magic a very interesting dynamic changed: the platform players perceived all this interop, open standards as a serious competitive threat.
Microsoft and IBM in particular got very involved very quickly, and the once simple & elegant concepts quickly devolved into multiple competing standards that were a horrible, illogical, impractical mess. This happened in less than two years... Open-standards based web services essentially became an irrational choice vs just "staying with your existing vendor's stack..."
That glimmer of amazing potential magic was quickly and effectively killed. Am I saying XML & web services were perfect? of course not. I am saying a thread of amazing potential was pulled, then around 1999 it was cut. And it was sad to see first hand.
I hope GraphQL, JSON, the incredible variety of cloud services and other interesting bits tap into that same magic.
Blockchain... imho interesting, but I fail to see many use cases where business side buyers [ aka budgets ] must have a blockchain-based solution. Looks like tech still searching for need and product/mrkt fit to me... think long-term it offers many areas an interesting evolutionary step, but I don't see it as hugely revolutionary gamechanging stuff.
Thanks for the walk down memory lane...
jefecoon | 8 years ago | on: Bitwarden - open source password manager
jefecoon | 8 years ago | on: Ask HN: Remote Employees Double-Dipping?
Our Seattle/Bellevue based startup hired VP & Dir of outside sales in Silicon Valley. Expensive hires, big payout to recruiting firm, then these two proved extremely difficult to get on the phone, schedule meetings with, et al.
SVP Sales flew in unexpectedly, called & had them pick him up at San Jose Airport. When he threw his bag into the trunk he noticed they had not only our sales & mktg materials, but SEVEN other companies' materials as well. He grilled them on what work they'd accomplished, clients called / met, et al, then ended up firing them before he flew home.
We passed along info to authorities, who later shared the recruiting firm had been in on it, and they were trying to collect evidence to persecute. Sounded like they were collecting recruiting fees & salaries, then sharing among all 'co-conspirators.' FBI was pulled into it, so I assume it involved fairly substantial cash.
jefecoon | 9 years ago | on: 'When will I use Pythagoras (or Ratios) in real life?'
All that satellite imagery? Every single pixel, from every single satellite fly-over / observation, all interpreted / post-processed / calculated into actual meaningful data via Pythagorean theorem.
E.g. every data point processed for "incident angle" of the observation platform above parcel/pixel observed. Basics @
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angle_of_incidence_(optics)
http://www.crisp.nus.edu.sg/~research/tutorial/freqpol.htm
Math FTW.
<< edit to format >>
jefecoon | 9 years ago | on: Verizon, AT&T, Comcast Say They Will Not Sell Customer Browsing Histories
E.g. https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2017/03/first-horseman-privacy...
jefecoon | 9 years ago | on: Uber Self-Driving Truck Packed with Budweiser Makes First Delivery in Colorado
Well played Uber, well played.
jefecoon | 9 years ago | on: Announcing Rails 6: An Imagined Keynote
Great ideas in your article.
jefecoon | 11 years ago | on: Ask HN: Those who quit their jobs to travel the world, how did it go?
I'd spent around seven years as part of an early-stage startup team, built up company to 500+, was worth tens of millions on paper then actually made nothing. I needed a break, and thought a couple months off would be great.
I had hundreds of thousands of frequent flyer miles and had planned to go first class to India, train around, see the Himalaya, then end up on a beach in Thailand as the finale. Still hope to do this, some day.
Instead I stayed in N America: skied Mt Rainier and several other Cascade volcanoes, rafted Grand Canyon with my parents, lived in Yosemite Valley climbing for nearly two months, climbed many amazing places in Cascades, Rockies & Alaska. I ended up spending around ten months off chasing adventures.
I did receive phone calls about jobs from people who knew I was off, wondering if/when I'd come back to reality. One of these calls lead to my next job, consulting at Microsoft for several years.
With over a decade passed since I took this year off I can say concretely I have no regrets. It may However, I do have friends who've taken extended time off who've felt it hurt their careers...
I've noticed a curious thing: I now intentionally tell people about my year off when interviewing, etc, and find reactions to my extended time off very telling indicator: reaction: "Hmmm, really. What can you tell me about your work ethic?" => Do not work for someone like this, period...
"A year off? I hope you got that out of your system and are ready to work hard here at Widget Corp." => Likely have zero concept or concern about work/life balance; will question your time-off requests.
"I could never do that, sounds so scary but incredible... did it hurt your career?" => These people are fine, and will love your slide-show screen-saver; intentionally pause your powerpoint every now and then to give them a taste because they'll enjoy it.
"OMG really??? I've always wanted to... where did you go? how awesome was it? would you do it again?" => Almost 100% of the time people with this reaction are awesome. Find these people.
Research -> Define 'Domains' -> BDD -> Domain Specs -> Overall Arch Specs / complete/consistent/gap analysis -> Spec Revision -> TDD Dev.
Smaller projects this is overkill. Larger projects, imho, gain considerable value from BDD and Overall Architecture Spec complete/consistent/gap analysis...
Cheers